Bürgerliches Recht im nachbürgerlichen Zeitalter – 100 Jahre Soziales Privatrecht in Deutschland, Frankreich und Italien
David Deroussin / Martin Löhnig / Ferdinando Mazzarella / Stephan Wagner (Hrsg.)
Bd. II: Totalitäres Soziales Privatrecht? Die juristische „Achse Berlin–Rom“
Studien zur europäischen Rechtsgeschichte 327-2
Frankfurt am Main: Klostermann 2025
VIII, 337 S.
ISBN 978-3-465-04545-8

Over the past hundred years, the development of private law in Europe has followed a trajectory from a liberal notion of private law to a more socially oriented one. The foundations for this were laid in the German-French-Italian discourse in between the two World Wars; further significant impulses occurred under the fascist regimes in Germany and Italy and then, after 1945, in the context of the European integration of the three states. Now, for the first time, the genesis of a modern social private law has undergone an in-depth analysis in trilateral conferences at the Villa Vigoni. This book – the second of three volumes resulting from these discussions – deals with the relevance of the legal »axis Berlin–Rome« («Asse Roma–Berlino») in this context.